Indigowares releases The Amparo Blue Collection for Autumn 2017.

Lisa Reddings from Indigowares is an experienced textile designer for fashion and surface pattern industries. Her stunning new product line The Amparo Blue collection is handcrafted through a labour of love, drawing on the Japanese shibori techniques.

Tote bags / Silk scarves / Purses / Vanity bags and Bracelets.
All have been beautifully hand-dyed in indigo. Some have intricate shibori patterns, some just draw on the rich hues that natural indigo dying creates.

London, England. 12th October 2017

Textile designer Lisa Reddings from Indigowares is releasing the brand new Amparo Blue Collection, and each product will be individually made by the designer herself.

Indigowares is known for creating genuine hand-dyed shibori designs for men and woman who care about quality, design and authenticity.

So, for the first time, Lisa Reddings has designed an entire product line of her favorite and most popular scarves, tote bags and purses. The new Amparo Blue Collection is scheduled to go live on 12th October 2017.

The collection will be exclusively sold on the website indigowares.com where the limited products are scheduled to sell out by the end of the season.

The scarves are designed to showcase the unique shibori patterns Lisa designs with their rich elegance and clean geometric twist they make anyone feel as though they can indulge in their inner bohemian style.

Lisa Reddings is excited to welcome her fans to her distinctive new handmade product line that they’ve been requesting.

CONTACT INFO

For more information about The Amparo Blue Collection or for an interview with Lisa Reddings, please write to info@indigowares.com
or call Lisa on 07799 200141
Media high-res 300 dpi pictures available upon request.

About Indigowares –

Lisa Reddings started working with indigo and designing using the ancient Japanese shibori resist dying techniques after she was faced with a very real problem. ‘One day I realised that everything was so mass-produced that in short there was hardly anything unique made in a traditional way with a contempory edge.’
After many months of creating shibori silk scarves by hand, Lisa Redding’s products started gaining notoriety amongst the handmade fashion and accessory industry.